On 02/12/11 12:01, Gareth France wrote: > Canonical don't support individual retailers without partner agreements > (not that they do much if you are a partner) and they don't support end > users without support contracts. > >> they do sell some level of support >> http://shop.canonical.com/**index.php?cPath=41<http://shop.canonical.com/index.php?cPath=41> >> http://shop.canonical.com/**index.php?cPath=31<http://shop.canonical.com/index.php?cPath=31> >> >> and importantly they have set up a global structure of Local Community >> teams, which this is one of. If you want to introduce Ubuntu to more than a >> hundred desktops (preferably a couple of thousand) then professional >> services team would be interested (give me a shout, I can put you in touch >> with the right people). If you are selling computers and want to >> pre-install Ubuntu then the OEM team might be interested if you are getting >> them made in volumes of tens of thousands or more in the far East. For less >> than that it is community based support through the LoCo team, and don't >> depend on fast responses from Canonical for anything. >> >> Alan >> > Much as I expected to hear Alan, however I firstly feel that this is a bad > move, would it hurt them to have a range of POS display materials? Would it > hurt them if every small retailer in the country was displaying these? And > secondly I still don't know where I stand legally with using the logo in my > home grown leaflets cards and banners? Unless they tell me how can I > conduct business with any level of confidence? > Agreed, we need a common look and feel to all materials,
I don't mind paying for em in the store either say a reasonable amount for 50 or 100 flyers, Paul -- -- http://www.zleap.net Join the revolution, switch to Ubuntu http://www.ubuntu.com -- [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/
